
How 'algorithm' got its name from a 9th-century Persian mathematician
How 'algorithm' got its name from a 9th-century Persian mathematician June 11, 20265:00 AM ET By Scott Neuman The first microcomputer named "Micral N" was created by the French engineer Francois Gernelle in 1973, five...
No Meeting by June 30 — Where will Trump and Putin meet after that?
Here is the latest breaking news from around the world: How 'algorithm' got its name from a 9th-century Persian mathematician June 11, 20265:00 AM ET By Scott Neuman The first microcomputer named "Micral N" was created by the French engineer Francois Gernelle in 1973, five years before Apple and 3 years before IBM. Guillaume Souvant/ hide caption toggle caption Guillaume Souvant/ It's a simple word that has developed a sinister connotation: algorithm. For many of us, algorithms help determine what we watch, read and listen to — in the process, confirming our tastes and biases, and creating ideological echo chambers.
The word might not seem like one that would get much consideration from the Holy See. But last month in his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV addressed the potential dangers of artificial intelligence. The word "algorithm" came up 19 times.
The Details
Pope Leo XIV waves as he leaves after his weekly general audience in St. Peter's Square at The Vatican, Wednesday, May 27, 2026. Alessandra Tarantino/AP hide caption toggle caption Alessandra Tarantino/AP Religion Pope Leo takes aim at big tech in sweeping encyclical on AI As part of NPR's "Word of the Week" series, we're looking at the history of the word that's defined much of modern life — and in the process, we'll blow the dust off some ancient mathematical concepts.
Where does it come from? The etymology of the word is a strange one, according to Rob Watts, a journalist and host of RobWords, a popular YouTube channel about word origins and usage. "It just sounds like a mathematical term," he notes.
Instead, it invokes a specific mathematician, he says: the 9th century Persian Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi. Sponsor Message "It's actually the Latin take on that name al-Khwarizmi that we're invoking when we use the word algorithm," Watts says. But it's taken a rather convoluted journey to reach us a dozen centuries later.
What Experts Say
The modern word algorithm traces back to the Latin algorismus through French (algorisme) and English (algorism). It also got "somewhat conflated with the term "arithmetic" before arriving in its current form, Watts says. Who was Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi?
Al-Khwarizmi wasn't just a mathematician — he was also an astronomer and geographer, who hailed from south of the Aral Sea in present day Uzbekistan. Part of his name is derived from Khwarazm, as the region was called. But mathematics was where he made some of his most important contributions.
Through his influential book, which roughly translates to The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing, he helped introduce algorithmic methods for solving mathematical problems, popularized the use of Hindu-Arabic numerals (including the concept of zero) in the West, and laid the groundwork for algebra — thus ensuring his place in the hearts of generations of ninth graders.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





